 
PLANT RESEARCH BREIFING PAPERS - No
sense in rejection of biotechnology for improving food
SPECIAL TO THE POST-INTELLIGENCER
May
26, 2000
By R. JAMES COOK
As
a plant scientist who has devoted a 40-year career to
helping farmers manage their crop diseases without pesticides,
I find no sense in the reasons given for rejecting biotechnology
for food and agriculture.
One
question I have heard repeatedly from consumers is "when
will agriculture become less dependent on pesticides to
produce our food?" While there are many approaches
to reducing pesticide use, the ultimate one is to make
the crop plant genetically resistant to its pests and
diseases -- like immunization of people and animals.
Traditional
plant breeding has made this happen for about 25 percent
of crop diseases and no more than 10 percent of the insect
pests of crops. Biotechnology offers the means to access
all of nature's genes for pest defense and therefore greatly
reduce agriculture's dependence on pesticides.
And,
because the genetic changes are so precise, and also so
small relative to the total genetic makeup of the plant,
the typically modified plant looks exactly like its modified
parent.
McDonald's
restaurants is only accepting french fries from the russet
Burbank or "Idaho" potato produced under the
traditional pesticide-intensive system, rather than from
the same potato with specific genes added for pest defense
so that it can be grown with greatly reduced amounts of
pesticide.
McDonald's
has concluded that consumers do not believe that french
fries from the genetically modified (GM) version of the
russet potato are safe. In fact, surveys indicate that
the great majority of American consumers trust the conclusions
of the Food and Drug Administration, the Environmental
Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
the National Academy of Sciences, all of which have reported
over and over again that foods from GM plants are as safe
as food from the same plants without these added genes.
In
making its decision, McDonald's is forcing farm workers
to again face the risks of applying these pesticides and
working in fields that have been treated with these pesticides.
Several
hundred million Asian people, who eat rice every day,
are deficient in Vitamin A, a problem that can now be
corrected by using biotechnology. Scientists in Switzerland
have produced what is called "golden rice,"
a variety with three genes added to make vitamin A in
the grain. At the same time, the popular press in Europe
refers to food from plants with genes introduced by the
new tools of biotechnology as "frankenfoods."
Earlier
this year, my wife and I visited a farmers' market in
Hawaii. I knew that the papaya industry in Hawaii, and
elsewhere in the tropics, is threatened with extinction
by papaya ringspot, a disease caused by a virus harbored
harmlessly in the surrounding vegetation but lethal in
papaya when carried to these vulnerable plants by plant-sucking
aphids.
After
all other attempts failed, the disease was brought under
control by inserting a copy of a gene from the virus itself
into the genetic makeup of the papaya. The method is like
immunization, and it works almost universally for virus-disease
control in all plants.
Since
this farmers' market claims to sell organic, I asked about
the papaya with the virus gene added for resistance to
papaya ringspot. The answer was "we just say that
it was grown without pesticides." How silly that
they cannot refer to this papaya as organic, especially
since the papaya fruits without the virus gene are infected
with the whole virus. What could be more organic than
papaya with its own built-in genetically based defense
against this disease?
As
a public servant dependent on tax dollars to support my
work, I have watched budgets for agricultural research
decline or remain flat, while the cost of doing research
has continued to increase. Biotechnology has presented
the private sector with incentives to make up the difference,
but development of these crops requires deep pockets.
Now I hear calls to limit involvement of the private sector
in this research.
It
seems to me that there is something backward in the logic
that says we should fear GM foods. While the opponents
of biotechnology are concerned about food safety, the
environment and farm economics, it is a fact that keeping
GM-free food in the marketplace will depend on continued
use of the pesticides and other costly inputs required
for growing these crops.
On
the other hand, genetically modified crops make agriculture
less harmful to the environment, and improve conditions
for farmers while making food less expensive, more convenient,
nutritious and safe for consumers.
I
firmly believe there is great promise in the science and
application of biotechnology. It is needed to help feed
the 8 billion people projected to be on this Earth by
about 2030, and in numerous other ways it will improve
the lives of people worldwide.
R.
James Cook holds an endowed chair in wheat research at
Washington State University in Pullman.
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